Ebook Emerging technologies in surgery: Part 2

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Ebook Emerging technologies in surgery: Part 2

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(BQ) Part 2 book Emerging technologies in surgery has contents: Evolving endoluminal therapies, microtechnology in surgical devices, radiofrequency and hepatic tumors, tissue engineering, adapting to future technologies,... and other contents.

Part III Part III Robotics and Novel Surgical Approaches Chapter Robotics in General Surgery: Today and Tomorrow Federico Moser and Santiago Horgan 9.1 Introduction 9.2 The world of surgery, having so long been isolated from computers, is evolving The adoption of robotic technology is widespread It covers the spectrum of surgical specialties and crosses international boundaries More than 10,000 operations have been performed using the da Vinci® surgical system General surgeons, urologists, neurosurgeons, thoracic surgeons, cardiovascular surgeons, gynecologists, and vascular surgeons alike are using the system The range of robotic cases ranges from the simplest cholecystectomy to the most complex mitral valve repair An informal survey conducted in 2004 by our university showed that approximately 200 systems in the United States, 60 systems in Europe, and systems in Asia are currently in clinical use At the University of Illinois at Chicago, we have performed more than 300 robotic-assisted procedures (Table 9.1) In this chapter, we review the current application of robotics in general surgery Table 9.1  Robotic-assisted procedures performed at the University of Illinois Procedure Cholecystectomy Number of cases Roux en-Y gastric bypass 110 Adjustable gastric banding 30 Heller myotomy 50 Nissen fundoplication Epiphrenic diverticulectomy Total esophagectomy 18 Esophageal leiomyoma resection Pyloroplasty Gastroyeyunostomy Transduodenal sphincteroplasty Adrenalectomy Donor nephrectomy 10 120 Cholecystectomy Since the first robotic-assisted cholecystectomy was performed in 1997 by Himpens et al in Belgium [1], several case series were reported in the literature [2, 3] The authors of these studies did not find any significant advantages over conventional laparoscopic surgery when using the robotic system to perform the operation They stated that the need for a specially trained operating room staff was an unnecessary hindrance for a low-complexity procedure They also stated that the operating room costs were higher with the robotic system, due to more expensive instrumentation, robot time, and longer case time In addition, they indicated that it was extremely difficult to perform a cholangiogram with the system in place due to the large footprint and bulk of the robotic arms At this time, there are no case studies or randomized controlled trials large enough to suggest the expected decrease in complications of cholecystectomy, such as common bile duct (CBD) injury In conclusion, we postulate that the advantages of robotic technology may have potential use in advanced procedures such as repair of the common bile duct after injury, but that current evidence does not support the routine application of this technology in laparoscopic cholecystectomy 9.3 Bariatric Surgery The field of bariatric surgery benefited greatly from the introduction of minimally invasive techniques Robotic-assisted surgery represents a small but growing subset of minimally invasive surgical applications that enables surgeons to perform bariatric procedures with minimal alteration of their current laparoscopic or open technique A survey of surgeons in 2003 showed that only 11 surgeons in the United States were currently using a robotic surgical system for bariatric surgery [4] The reason for this is the small number of bariatric cases performed laparoscopically (10%) in the United States and the limited number of institutions 76 III  Robotics and Novel Surgical Approaches with a robotic system The first robotic-assisted adjustable gastric banding was reported in 1999 [5], and the first-ever robotically assisted gastric bypass in September 2000 by our group [6] 9.3.1 Robotic-Assisted Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass The procedure that benefits most from robotic assistance in the field of bariatric surgery is the gastric bypass Our group currently uses the system to perform a robotic-assisted, hand-sewn gastrojejunostomy for completion of the laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass procedure The operative room is set up as shown in (Fig 9.1) The first part of the opera- tion is performed laparoscopically; a small pouch and a 120-cm limb are created After this, the robot is put in place and a running two-layer, hand-sewn antecolic antegastric gastrojejunal anastomosis is performed We believe that performing a hand-sewn anastomosis offers the best method to decrease the risk of leak We recently completed analyzing the data of our robotic bariatric surgeon and a surgeon at an outside institution Both surgeons were junior faculty and were well within the steep learning curve of the minimally invasive approach They have now completed close to 200 procedures without an anastomotic leak They have also experienced significantly fewer strictures than the 9–14% expected rate of circular stapler anastomotic techniques [7, 8] Performing a hand-sewn anastomosis also eliminates the requirement of passing a stapler anvil down the esophagus (avoiding the risk of esopha- Fig 9.1  Operating room set up for esophageal surgery and gastric bypass Federico Moser and Santiago Horgan geal injury) or adding an additional stapler line after passing the anvil transgastric In addition, our survey of national robotic surgeons revealed that 107 cases of robotic-assisted Roux-en-Y gastric bypasses were performed by seven surgeons in the United States in 2003 [4] The main utility of the robotic system was found to be in creating the gastrojejunostomy, the articulating wrists, three-dimensional view, and motion scaling, allow a precise hand-sewn anastomosis [4] (Fig 9.2) This was most notable in patients with a high basal metabolic rate ([BMI] greater than 60 or super obese) and/or those patients with an enlarged left hepatic lobe, which greatly decreases the working area beneath the liver Regarding operative time, surgeons having an experience greater than 20 cases reported that preparation for the robot can be decreased to as little as and robotic work time can also diminish by 50% [4] Our institutional experience and that of the surgeons who responded to our survey is that robotically assisted hand-sewn gastrojejunostomy is superior to any currently available minimally invasive anastomotic technique This technique has the potential to diminish the leak, stricture, and mortality rates of this procedure [4] However, larger studies conducted in prospective Chapter 9  Robotics in General Surgery: Today and Tomorrow randomized fashion still need to be performed to verify our currently perceived clinical advantages 9.3.2 Robotic-Assisted Adjustable Gastric Banding Robotic-assisted adjustable gastric banding is also performed at select institutions Three of 11 surveyed robotic-assisted bariatric surgeons in the United States were using the da Vinci® System in 2003 [4] At the University of Illinois at Chicago, we began randomizing patients to robotic or laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding placement in 2001 We found similar outcomes in length of hospital stay and weight loss, although the operative time was significantly longer in the robotic group [4] In our experience, we were able to distinguish the advantages of the robotic approach from the disadvantage of increased operative time It was apparent that patients with BMI greater than 60 would benefit most In these patients, the increased torque on conventional laparoscopic instruments makes precise operative technique vastly more difficult Robotic instruments are thicker (8 mm), and the mechanical system is able to deliver more force while operating in these patients with thick abdominal walls The mechanical power provided by the robotic system provides relief to the operating surgeon, eliminating the struggle to maintain instrument position or counter the torque from rotating instruments around the fixed pivot point In addition, the increased intra-abdominal fat content and size of the viscera, especially the liver, in these patients leaves a much smaller operative field In this situation, the robotic manipulation of the articulating instruments in small working areas provides significant advantage Given these observations, we are currently using the robotic system in patients with a BMI greater than 60 9.3.3 Robotic-Assisted Biliary Pancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch Fig 9.2  Gastrojejunal anastomosis for gastric bypass The third bariatric procedure being perfomed is robotic-assisted biliary pancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS) Three surgeons are currently using the robot for this procedure, Drs Ranjan and Debra Sudan from Creighton Hospital in Omaha, and Dr Gagner from Mount Sinai in New York [4] Most reports describe performing the duodenojejunal anastomosis with robotic-assistance No comparative data have been reported However, the stated advantages are the system’s ability to complete an otherwise diffi- 77 78 III  Robotics and Novel Surgical Approaches cult and advanced laparoscopic maneuver with greater ease and more precision, with no untoward effects 9.4 Esophageal Surgery Advanced esophageal procedures, previously requiring large open and at times thoracic incisions, can now be performed minimally invasively providing decreased pain and hospital time to the patient The general rules for all the esophageal procedures performed via the abdomen are similar For the trocar placement, the first port placed is 12 mm, and is placed using a gasless optical technique It is positioned two fingerbreadths lateral to the umbilicus and one palm width inferior to the left subcostal margin The position of this port is optimal for viewing the gastroesophageal junction, and the size is appropriate for the robotic camera One 8-mm robotic port is then placed just inferior to the left costal margin in the midclavicular line A 12-mm port is then inserted again inferior to the left costal margin but in the anterior axillary line The large size of this port is essential for the insertion of stapling devices, and clip appliers by the assistant if needed The extreme lateral position is necessary for proper retraction, and avoidance of collisions with the robotic arms A Nathanson liver retractor is then inserted just inferior to the xiphoid process The liver is then retracted anteriorly, exposing the esophageal hiatus, and another 8-mm robotic port is inserted inferior to the right costal margin in the midclavicular line The room setting and the position of the robotic system is similar in all the advanced esophageal procedures (Fig 9.1) In the following esophageal procedures, with exception of the Nissen fundoplication, we found benefits in the robotic assisted approach when comparing with the laparoscopic technique Although the Nissen fundoplication is a very useful procedure to learn robotic surgery, in our experience it has been shown to prolong the operative time with similar postoperative results sia However, the surgeons are still hampered by their inability to have flexible instruments and high-definition video imaging The robotic system is ideally suited for advanced esophageal surgery, and we have applied this technology in our surgical approach to achalasia The myotomy is extended a minimum of cm proximally and 1–2 cm distally onto the gastric fundus Failure to achieve adequate proximal dissection of the esophagus with a subsequent short myotomy is the most common reason for failure Therefore, the dissection of the esophagus should extend well into the thorax in order to complete the myotomy The laparoscopic approach in this small area is often difficult and frequently the visual field is obscured by the instrumentation The articulating wrists of the robot enable the surgeon to operate in the narrow field around the thoracic esophagus without this limitation Perforation of the esophageal mucosa, seen in 5–10% of laparoscopic cases independent of the surgeon’s experience, is the most feared complication when performing a Heller myotomy The three-dimensional view with ×12 magnification and the natural tremor of the surgeon’s hand eliminated through electronic filtering of the robotic system allow each individual muscular fiber to be visualized and divided ensuring a proper myotomy, diminishing dramatically the incidence of perforation (Fig 9.3) Following the myotomy and crural closure, we complete a Dor fundoplication In the last years, our group performed 50 robotically assisted myotomy for achalasia at our institution In our series, we have not experienced a single perforation, even though many of our patients were treated with Botox preoperatively; a similar number of cases have been compiled by Dr Melvin at Ohio State University, with similar results The average length of hospital stay is 1.5 days (range: 0.8–4), with no conversions and a 100% success rate We strongly believe that the robotic-assisted approach will be the gold standard for Heller myotomy in the near future 9.4.1 Heller Myotomy Achalasia, a disease of unknown etiology, results in failure of lower esophageal sphincter (LES) relaxation and aperistalsis The incidence is about in 100,000 in North America Options for medical management include medication, botulinum toxin injection, and balloon dilatation None of nonsurgical treatments have been as successful as surgical myotomy Many years after Heller performed the first surgical myotomy, the minimally invasive surgical techniques became the gold standard of the surgical treatment for the achala- Fig 9.3  Robotic myotomy of circular esophageal fibers Federico Moser and Santiago Horgan 9.4.2 Resection of Epiphrenic Diverticulum Chapter 9  Robotics in General Surgery: Today and Tomorrow Epiphrenic diverticulum is an uncommon entity that most frequently occurs on the right side of the distal 10 cm of the esophagus The pathogenesis of esophageal diverticula remains controversial [9] The most common symptoms are dysphagia, heartburn, and regurgitation of undigested food particles Surgery is indicated in symptomatic patients, and a myotomy at the time of the excision is recommended when abnormal motility is present Longer instruments and reticulating wrists allow surgeons to extend the dissection deep into the thorax for more proximal diverticula and to operate in tight quarters, manipulating the esophagus without causing undue tension or torque on this structure The robotic system clearly facilitates the dissection of the neck of the diverticulum when compared with conventional laparoscopic instruments Once the diverticulum neck is identified and dissected free, the diverticulum is resected using an endoscopic linear stapler Endoscopy is used to aid in identification of the diverticulum intraoperatively, and for inspection of the staple line following removal When preoperative testing reveals a motility disorder, a myotomy with a Dor fundoplication is performed The robotic-assisted approach via the abdomen has been used in six patients within our institution As with myotomy for achalasia, we feel the robotic system markedly improves the accuracy which this can be performed thereby reducing the chance of mucosal perforation tion, the articulating hook makes possible a safe periesophageal dissection, preventing bleeding and trauma Additionally, the robotics instruments are 7.5 cm longer than are standard laparoscopic instruments; therefore, it is possible a greater proximal mobilization beyond the level of the carina and a thoracoscopic approach is not necessary With the esophagus fully mobilized, the stomach is then tubularized along the lesser curve, using several fires of a Linear Cutting Stapler (Ethicon, Cincinnati, Ohio) The esophagus is removed through the neck, and the anastomosis is performed A total of 14 patients have undergone robotically assisted total esophagectomy for a diagnosis of high-grade dysplasia at our institution In our series, the total operative time was 279 (175–360) min, including robotic setup time Our last five cases averaged 210 (range 175–210) The intraoperative average blood loss for the combined robotic and open cervical portions of the operations was 43 (10–60) ml There were no intraoperative complications, and no patients developed laryngeal nerve injury postoperatively The hospital stay averaged (6–8) days There have been no deaths, and our current average follow up is 264 (45–531) days We believe that with minimal blood loss, short hospital and ICU stays, and lack of mortality, robotically assisted transhiatal esophagectomy has proven to a safe and effective operation However, randomized controlled trials need to be conducted to inspect oncologic integrity if this operation is to be performed in patients with diagnoses other than high-grade dysplasia 9.4.3 Total Esophagectomy 9.4.4 Esophageal Leiomyoma The benefits of using laparoscopic technique for total esophagectomy have been already reported [10, 11] The laparoscopic transhiatal dissection of the esophageal body near the pulmonary vein, the aorta, and the parietal pleura is very challenging Our first robotic-assisted transhiatal esophagectomy was reported in 2003 [12] For this procedure, the thoracic portion of the operations (via the abdomen) is undertaken with the robotic system, and one assistant port The cervical anastomosis is carried out with an open cervical incision in all cases The articulated instruments using the robotic system allow precise blunt and sharp dissection of the intrathoracic esophageal attachments The benefits of robotics are maximized in this surgery in that the reticulating writs allow the surgeon to navigate such a narrow space of dissection Because of this reticulation, the shaft of the instruments is out of the surgeon’s view, keeping the field clear The three-dimensional image and the chance of magnification of the operative field view provide extreme detail and clarity When scarring is present, making tissue less yielding to blunt dissec- Leiomyoma is the most common benign mesenchymal esophageal tumor, representing up to 80% of benign esophageal tumors Anatomically these neoplasms are localized to the middle and lower thirds of the esophagus, in most cases as a single lesion [13] The most common symptoms include dysphagia and atypical chest pain Surgical intervention is indicated not only for pain but also in asymptomatic patients in order to prevent the excessive growth that can complicate patient well-being and future surgical resection For resection of a leiomyoma, the patient is placed in the left lateral decubitus position and a robotic-assisted thoracoscopy is performed via five trocars Circumferential dissection of the esophagus is performed using the hook electrocautery robotic extension The articulated instruments allow the surgeon to place the grasper behind the esophagus without producing torque, which is frequent with rigid thoracoscopic instruments and facilitate a safe dissection of tumors that lie near the azygous vein The isolation of the tumor starts by transecting the longitudinal muscular layer (myotomy), us- 79 80 III  Robotics and Novel Surgical Approaches to perform surgery for gastric cancer The benefits of the EndoWrist, the scaling and the tremor filtering, was found to be extremely useful when performing wedge resections, intragastric resections, and distal gastrectomies [20] Even though the initial results can be encouraging, more experience is required to establish the role of the robotic system in the gastric surgery 9.7 Fig 9.4  Robotic-assisted enucleation of a leiomyoma ing the articulating robotic electrocautery Then, blunt and sharp dissection is used to enucleate the tumor from the esophageal wall (Fig 9.4) The articulating wrists allow a precise closure of the myotomy in a running fashion to complete the procedure In our series, we have not seen mucosal injury, which we attribute to the better visualization, precise dissection afforded by the articulated instruments, and tremor control provided by the robotic system [14] 9.5 Pancreatic Surgery The application of minimally invasive techniques for pancreatic surgery remains in its infancy Since the first endocrine pancreatic tumor resection was reported by Gagner and Sussman in 1996 [15, 16], only one roboticassisted pancreatic tumor resection case was reported by Melvin in 2003 [17] Melvin’s group has also reported the experience of pancreatic duct reconstruction after open pancreaticoduodenectomy Although there are no reported data available, Giulianotti et al from Italy have performed more than 20 robotic Whipple resections with very good results Robotic pancreatic resection is feasible, but further advances in techniques and technology are necessary and future experience will determine the real benefits of this approach 9.6 Gastric Surgery A limited number of robotic-assisted gastric surgeries were reported in the United States These include pyloroplasties, gastric mass resections, and gastrojejunostomies [6, 18] In Japan, a country with high incidence of gastric cancer, the laparoscopic treatment for early gastric cancer has been used with good results [19] Hashizume et al reported the use of the robotic system Colorectal Surgery The introduction of laparoscopy to colorectal surgery extended benefits of minimally invasive techniques to this arena These benefits include shorter hospital stay, earlier return to activities, etc A robotic-assisted approach in the field of colorectal surgery is very promising, even though the current experience is very limited There are reports on right hemicolectomy, sigmoid colectomy, rectopexy, anterior resection, and abdominoperineal resection [21–23] Surgeons agree that the robot can be very useful in rectal surgery Fazio et al., from the Cleveland Clinic, compared robotic with laparoscopic approaches for colectomy in a small group of patients; they concluded that robotic colectomy is feasible and safe, but operative time is increased [24] In conclusion, robotic assistance, as in others fields of surgery, may facilitate complex colorectal surgeries, but more experience is still necessary 9.8 Adrenalectomy The first laparoscopic endocrine surgery experiences published in the literature were the laparoscopic adrenalectomies performed by Gagner in 1992 [25] Currently, the minimally invasive approach is the recommended standard for the treatment of benign adrenal lesions In Italy in 1999, Piazza and colleagues published the first robotic-assisted adrenalectomy using the Zeus Aesop [26] One year later, in August 2000, V B Kim and colleagues used the da Vinci® Robotic Surgical System to fully assist an adrenalectomy [2] Our first robotic-assisted bilateral adrenalectomy was published in 2001 [6] Brunaud and others prospectively compared standard laparoscopic adrenalectomy and robotic-assisted adrenalectomy in a group of 28 patients They found the robotic approach seemed to be longer (111 vs 83 min, p = 0.057), but this tendency decreased with surgeon experience The morbidity and the hospital stay were similar for both groups In addition, duration of standard laparoscopic adrenalectomy was positively correlated to patient’s BMI This correlation was absent in patients operated on with the da Vinci® system [27] Objective benefits of robotic vs Federico Moser and Santiago Horgan laparoscopic approach have not been demonstrated yet, but even given the limited experience available, the robotic system seems to be very useful for adrenalectomy in overweight and obese patients 9.9 Donor Nephrectomy Living kidney donation represents an important source for patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and has emerged as an appealing alternative to cadaveric donation Furthermore, within the last decade, laparoscopic donor nephrectomy has replaced the conventional open approach, and has gained surgeon and patients acceptance The first laparoscopic living donor nephrectomy was attempted to alleviate the shortage of kidneys for transplantation and to reduce the hospitalization and recuperation time associated to with open nephrectomy [28] The outcomes reported for the laparoscopic technique were similar to the open operation, adding all the advantages of minimally invasive procedures [29] The reduction of postoperative pain, shorter hospital stay, better cosmetic results, and shorter convalescence time are increasing the acceptance of the donors with the subsequent expansion of donor pool [30, 31] We started performing the robotic hand–assisted living donor nephrectomy utilizing the da Vinci® Surgical System (Intuitive Surgical, Sunny Valley, Calif.) in January 2001 Our technique is hand-assisted using the Chapter 9  Robotics in General Surgery: Today and Tomorrow LAP DISC (Ethicon, Cincinnati, Ohio) (Fig 9.5) The utilization of a hand-assisted device like the LAP DISC allows for faster removal of the kidney to decrease warm ischemia time [32] Another advantage of having the hand inside the abdomen is rapid control in case of bleeding, and avoidance of excessive manipulation of the kidney, which is otherwise required in the removal of the kidney with an extraction bag The robotic system provides the benefits of a minimally invasive approach without giving up the dexterity, precision and intuitive movements of open surgery A helical CT angiogram with three-dimensional reconstruction of the kidney is performed on all patients to evaluate abnormalities in the parenchyma, the collecting system, and renal vascular anatomy The reconstruction is a useful roadmap to identify the presence of multiple renal arteries The room setup is critical in our current operation (Fig 9.6) Two assisting surgeons are required; one surgeon has his or her right hand inside the patient, and the second surgeon exchanges the robotic instruments and assists the operative surgeon through the 12-mm trocar Since the beginning of our experience, we have implemented the policy of routinely harvesting the left kidney, regardless of the presence of vascular anomalies, to take advantage of the longer length of the left renal vein The presence of multiple renal arteries or veins has not been a problem for robotic-assisted approach We performed a study with 112 patients who underwent robotic-assisted LLDN, where the patient population was divided into two groups based on the Fig 9.5  Trocar and hand-port placement for donor nephrectomy 81 82 III  Robotics and Novel Surgical Approaches Fig 9.6  Operating room set up for nephrectomy and adrenalectomy presence of normal renal vascular anatomy (group A: ­ n = 81, 72.3%) or multiple renal arteries or veins (group B: n = 31, 27.7%) No significant difference in mortality, morbidity, conversion rate, operative time, blood loss, warm ischemia time, or length of hospital stay was noted between the two groups The outcome of kidney transplantation in the recipients was also similar in the two groups Since we started in 2000, we have improved on our operative technique We have noticed a statically significant decrease in the operative time (p < 0.0001), suggesting experience and confidence of the surgical transplant team The average operative time dropped from an initial 206 (range: 120–320 min) in the first 50 cases to 156 (range: 85–240 min) in the last 50 cases (p < 0.0001) The mean warm ischemia time was 87 s (range: 60–120 s) The average estimated blood loss was 50 ml (range: 10–1,500 ml) The length of hospital stay averaged days (range: 1–8 days) One- year patient and graft survivals were 100 and 98%, respectively In conclusion, our data demonstrates that robotic hand–assisted donor nephrectomy is a safe and effective procedure 9.10 Conclusion The introduction of the robotic system in the field of minimally invasive surgery has produced an authentic revolution Robotic surgery remains still in its infancy, and the limits of its expansion are unpredictable Nevertheless, the robotic approach has already proved to be safe and feasible in the most complex procedures in general surgery Currently, clear advantages of robotic technology are proven in surgical procedures where very precise movements in small areas and a good vision of the surgical field are required such as esopha- Federico Moser and Santiago Horgan geal surgery, bariatric surgery, donor nephrectomies, rectal surgery, etc However, in the era of evidencebased medicine, larger studies conducted in prospective randomized fashion still need to be performed to verify the perceived clinical benefits The velocity of the expansion of the robotic-assisted surgery is going to depend on the greater experience of the surgeons and the introduction of more technological advances References Jacob BP, Gagner M (2003) Robotics and general surgery Surg Clin North Am 83:1405–1419 Kim VB et al (2002) Early experience with telemanipulative robot-assisted laparoscopic cholecystectomy using da Vinci Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech 12:33–40 Marescaux J et al (2001) Telerobotic 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beginning Tissue Eng 10:309–320 163 Koike N, Fukumura D, Gralla O, Au P, Schechner JS, Jain RK (2004) Tissue engineering: creation of long-lasting blood vessels Nature 428:138–139 164 LeGeros RZ (2002) Properties of osteoconductive biomaterials: calcium phosphates Clin Orthop 395:81–98 165 Lickorish D, Ramshaw JA, Werkmeister JA, Glattauer V, Howlett CR (2004) Collagen-hydroxyapatite composite prepared by biomimetic process J Biomed Mater Res 68A:19–27 166 Oral E, Peppas NA (2004) Responsive and recognitive hydrogels using star polymers J Biomed Mater Res 68A:439–447 167 Tabata Y, Miyao M, Yamamoto M, Ikada Y (1999) Vascularization into a porous sponge by sustained release of basic fibroblast growth factor J Biomater Sci Polym Ed 10:957–968 168 Smith MK, Peters MC, Richardson TP, Garbern JC, Mooney DJ (2004) Locally enhanced angiogenesis promotes transplanted cell survival Tissue Eng 10:63–71 169 Shimizu T, Yamato M, Isoi Y, Akutsu T, Setomaru T, Abe K, Kikuchi A, Umezu M, Okano T (2002) Fabrication of pulsatile cardiac tissue grafts using a novel 3-dimensional cell sheet manipulation technique and temperature responsive cell culture surfaces Circ Res 90:e40 170 Hartgerink JD, Beniash E, Stupp SI (2001) Self-assembly and mineralization of peptide-amphiphile nanofibers Science 294:1684–1688 171 Zhang S (2003) Fabrication of novel biomaterials through molecular self-assembly Nat Biotechnol 21:1171–1178 172 Pratt AB, Weber FE, Schmoekel HG, Muller R, Hubbell JA (2004) Synthetic extracellular matrices for in situ tissue engineering Biotechnol Bioeng 86:27–36 173 Atala A (2004) Tissue engineering for the replacement of organ function in the genitourinary system Am J Transplant 4:58–73 151 Part VI Part VI Beyond the Future Chapter Adapting to Future Technologies 17 Richard M Satava* Advanced technologies disrupt the very way that surgery will be performed in the future There will also be a fundamental change in how medicine and scientific research will be conducted, beyond the hallowed scientific method There will be many different new surgical approaches, from non-invasive to biosurgery, with different robotic and autonomous systems that will require new skills and new training methods Surgical education will become criterion-based and life long, with continuous assessment 17.1 Introduction There has never been such an accelerated discovery of new technologies as during the past century; even the Renaissance pales in comparison In addition, the dissemination of these technologies, facilitated by the developing transportation and communication systems, has resulted in innovation becoming rapidly pervasive on a global scale This is a self-accelerating process: As new concepts and ideas are quickly disseminated throughout the world, researchers anywhere have immediate access to the information that will rapidly drive their research to the next discovery Amid this whirlwind of activity, the surgeon is being asked to provide careful and thoughtful clinical practice—to stay up to date and bring the latest technology to bear, while ensuring rigorous evaluation and resisting the temptation to jump on the bandwagon of the latest new discovery This dichotomy will continue: rapid acceptance and application versus prolonged stringent evaluation The following is an attempt to clarify the future trends so the practicing surgeon can adapt to change, and navigate between these two opposite poles 17.2 The Scientific Method Nothing is closer to the core of surgery than the principles of the scientific method by which we discover, evaluate, validate, and implement a new technology Until the turn of the 20th century, surgery was guided by tradition It was Nicholas Senn’s seminal article in 1908, which pointed out that rather than tradition, a surgeon should rely upon experience [1] No longer was it acceptable to continue the practices of old simply because it had become the custom; rather, Senn declared that surgeons should look at the experience and results of previous treatments and be guided by ­logical judgment in surgical practice From this modest beginning, surgery evolved into the scientific method as we know it today: hypothesis, research, conclusion, and implementation Laboratory research began to ascend and along with it came clinical trials Studies were carefully designed and crafted, and then rigorously conducted to gather the evidence necessary to prove or disprove the hypothesis, and culminated in publication of the scientific evidence, which resulted in the acceptance by the surgical community at large While this method has brought clarity and understanding out of chaos, the rigorous nature of the investigation has resulted in an extremely long time from discovery to validation to implementation Often new technologies were invoked before the evidence was confirmed, much to the detriment of the patients (laparoscopic cholecystectomy with initial increased incidence of bile duct injuries, or various chemotherapeutic agents with either unintended side effects or lack of efficacy) The converse was also true; prolonged evaluation resulted in many patients not receiving life-saving therapy while awaiting the results of trials, or new surgical procedures not being implemented for decades until the completion of trials (such as laparoscopic colectomy) While it is not the intent to suggest that the current rigorous process is neither valid nor necessary, there is a method that has been implemented by the scientific community that has not been considered by the medical profession, modeling and simulation There is some early implementation of simulation technologies being explored for rapid rational drug design and for understanding gene-based therapies Sophisticated computer programs are being used to simulate the effects of literally millions of pos- * The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private views of the authors and are not to be construed as official, or as reflecting the views of the Department of the Army, Department of the Navy, the Advanced Research Projects Agency, or the Department of Defense 156 VI  Beyond the Future sible compounds, looking for the desired combinations and possible mechanisms of action These simulations include the composition, structure, folding, bonding, etc., iterated over thousands of potential combinations to discover the most likely candidates for production and study Thus a nearly infinite number of potential biochemical molecules are reduced to specific drugs or genetic sequences that are targeted and used in clinical trails There is a ­primordial effort to take the next step, to test these candidate therapies through simulation on a “virtual cell” (in silico, or computational biology), before implementing them in clinical trials on patients Following this example to its ultimate conclusion, it is anticipated that it will be possible to simulate an entire organ, or even a single patient or population of individuals, to test and evaluate drug or genetic therapy before implementing on patients Perhaps all therapies— drugs, procedures, energy-directed therapy—will be simulated until validated before using on patients: in essence, a virtual clinical trial on millions of computersimulated patients over 50 years completed in week of computation on a computer This will be a “predictive process of simulation”, the ultimate clinical trial Although it will take decades to improve the methodology, first principles already valid in engineering and other scientific disciplines demonstrate the significance of this methodology, especially in rapidly assessing a new technology The result is a new way of technology application: discovery, laboratory investigation (scientific method), predictive simulation, clinical trial In the near term, the use of the predictive simulation will be able to dramatically reduce the length and number of subjects required to demonstrate efficacy in clinical trials (as extrapolated by the use of simulation in industry) The ultimate goal is the removal of patients from clinical trials, just as there is now a transition of using simulation in surgical skills to decrease or eliminate the need of animals in training and assessment of surgeon competency With this new methodology the clinical surgeon must adapt to the changing basis of providing evidence Clearly it is no longer acceptable to base treatment upon tradition without supporting evidence (evidencebased surgery) It will be prudent to watch the emerging evidence on the predictability of simulations, for only with carefully designed computer programming will the simulation actually match the predictability of clinical trials What the new simulation technology will be able provide that clinical trials cannot is predictability in compressed time: days instead of decades Thus, in reading manuscripts for the latest new technology, it is critical to look at the evidence for validity While there are well-known statistical methods that are used as the benchmarks for validation today, the practicing surgeon may soon need to learn new benchmarks that prove the validity of a simulated clinical trial 17.3 Interdisciplinary Medicine As indicated above, we are just beginning to understand the extraordinary complexity of our world Many of the new advances in technology have been due to the work of the interdisciplinary team, which has much greater knowledge than does any single investigator Such a team could be composed of as few as two scientific fields, such as engineering and computer science for a new surgical instrument, or a large complex organization of computational mathematicians, engineers, biochemists, molecular biologists, statisticians, and clinical practitioners, such as the team approach for research in artificial organs This also extends to the operating room, where surgical procedures are attaining a complexity that requires a team approach of anesthesiologist, surgeon, nurse, technician, etc., although new research in robotics may soon integrate the functions of the entire team into a single robotic system of surgeon, assistant surgeon, scrub nurse, and circulating nurse, all controlled by the surgeon at a surgical console outside the operating room without people There may also be the sharing of responsibility when performing a procedure; for example, in vascular stenting of carotid arteries, should it be the surgeon, interventional radiologist, cardiologist, or a team composed of all three? The challenge will be to craft strong, interdisciplinary teams For the researcher it will be of colleagues in other major fields of science, and for the clinician it will be forging and training a smoothly functioning interdisciplinary team in the operating room, clinic, or office 17.4 Multiaccess Surgery Gone are the days of a surgical therapy with a single surgical approach: open surgery Today many diseases may be treated by any number of procedures For example, esophageal tumors can be treated by open surgical resection, minimally access (laparoscopic) surgery, image-guided ablation (cryo-, thermal-, radiofrequency), noninvasive destruction (transcutaneous high-intensity focused ultrasound, or HIFU), endovascular embolization, or by endoluminal (endoscopic) ablation and/or stenting A number of diseases are best treated by dual or multiple modalities—combinations of minimally invasive and hand-assisted, endoluminal, laparoscopic, and so on Such approaches, usually reserved for complicated diseases, will also require a preoperative planning session, using three-dimensional virtual reconstruction of the patient-specific anatomy from CT, MRI, or other modalities While the results using such a preplanning process have unequivocally Richard M Satava shown increase precision and decrease operative time for liver [3], plastic, craniofacial [4], neurosurgery, and other procedures, there is significant time devoted to the preoperative planning and rehearsal process for which there is currently no reimbursement Eventually such a process will become routine for most complicated surgical cases; however, it is uncertain whether all procedures will be either planned or rehearsed ahead of time The busy practicing surgeon must strive to keep abreast of the new competing technologies and become trained and facile with as many approaches as is reasonable An awareness of this multiple access trend must be monitored, for it may well impact, through regulation, how surgical practice may be conducted It is conceivable that decades from now, surgeons will be required to rehearse all surgical procedures on the patient’s three-dimensional reconstructed anatomy before being allowed to operate on that patient 17.5 Information Technologies The ubiquitous access in a timely fashion to critical information is changing the daily practice of surgery on very simple but many crucial levels Knowledge about a patient and all his or her tests was kept in the chart at the bedside or in the memory of the surgeon Today that information resides on a central server, accessible anytime and anywhere through computer stations in the hospital, clinic, or office, or instantly at the bedside or parking lot using personal digital assistants (PDAs) or other communication devices In addition, knowledge about a particular disease or the latest clinical trial results were previously contained in journals in the library or surgeon’s office; that information is also available immediately through a computer or PDA Likewise, with new wireless sensors attached to patients, vital signs will be made available on the server anytime from anywhere The result is that the surgeon knows a great deal about the practice of medicine and their specific patients, in real time The challenge will be trying to sort out the most important information and apply the decision making for the best outcomes Information systems are also becoming enterprises, supporting the entire hospital system for the patient and for efficient hospital management There is a trend to patient-centric medicine: focusing all the information around a single patient’s record, rather than focusing each functional piece of information (X-ray, laboratory test, etc.) in different departments In addition a longitudinal record, from moment of entry into the hospital system until beyond final discharge, the entire patient encounter will be documented, tracked, billed, and analyzed for outcomes: clinical, administrative Chapter 17  Adapting to Future Technologies and financial The University of Maryland has an innovative, integrated perioperative system, which tracks the patient from admission to outpatient surgery until discharge later that day, including the full surgical procedure [5] Sophisticated vision recognition systems combined with smart tags monitor the patient, operating team, and operating theater and, supported by intelligent software and inference engines, automatically deduce and document the patient’s progress from preoperative to postoperative care Tracking personnel reduces lost time, trying to bring the operating team together in a timely fashion, while electronically labeling equipment and supplies permits just-in-time inventory and supply chain management The amount of authority the surgeon will be able to retain continues to diminish, especially in a time when automated information systems can much more efficiently perform processes and report outcomes than humans As a busy clinical surgeon strives to spend more time seeing more patients and performing more surgical procedures, the administrative requirements and bureaucratic burdens dramatically decrease efficiency The surgeon must adapt, and the most efficient way is to learn and harness the new technologies, rather that abdicating authority to administrators or becoming a slave to the technology 17.6 Surgical Education and Certification The paradigm shift in surgical education is from timebased training (e.g., years of surgical residency, and then graduate with a subjective agreement by experts of the surgeon’s basic training) to the new objective, criterion-, or proficiency-based training The earlier model of mentoring (supplemented by knowledge acquisition and testing: lectures followed by written tests) resulted in a subjective assessment of performance, especially of technical procedural skills The 1980s and 1990s saw the emergence of clinical problem-based learning, standardized patients for the Objective Structured Clinical Exam (OSCE), and the Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills (OSATS) [6] and McGill Inanimate System for Training and Evaluation of Laparoscopic Skills (MISTELS) [7] Along with the recent validation studies on virtual reality surgical simulators such as the Minimally Invasive Surgical Training – Virtual Reality (MIST-VR) [8], a new benchmark in surgical training has been set: objective assessment based upon expert-derived criterion for proficiency This is the paradigm shift Following the lead of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons in establishing standardized curriculum in basic skills in training and evaluation, the American Council of Graduate Medical Education and the American Board of Medical Specialties 157 158 VI  Beyond the Future in the United States have added the dimension of an increased rigor by defining the components of competency to be achieved through such structured curricula with objective performance metrics Although still in transition, the training of a surgeon is on a path of objectively documented acquisition of skills to a predefined level of proficiency in formal laboratory setting (rather than on patients), complimented with continuous evaluation during training and throughout the clinical career To the practicing surgeon, the phrase life-long learning takes on greater significance—no longer is it exclusively a professional obligation internalized in every surgeon when the Hippocratic Oath is taken; it is now a regulation that will be continuously monitored and evaluated It is necessary to adapt to this new environment of mandatory training for any (new) procedures, of continuous learning with assessment, and of auditing surgical practice performance for acceptable outcomes Failure to adapt will result in loss of surgical practice privileges 17.7 Surgical Simulation Surgical simulation deserves a separate emphasis because it has a larger role than only in surgical education Unquestionably, surgical simulation will continue to grow, developing newer, more sophisticated skills trainers that more closely approximate reality and that address abilities beyond basic skills such as simulating entire procedures However, it must be kept in mind that a simulator is simply a tool—albeit a powerful tool—to supplement a total educational curriculum It is essential to incorporate the didactic teaching of anatomy, steps of a procedure, and potential errors, along with expected outcomes of skills training and embed these into a curriculum that includes the simulator Continuous feedback while training (an automatic function of any proper simulator) provides the methodology for a goal-oriented, criterion-based curriculum that permits the student to learn at his or her own pace, on his or her own time, and with automatic mentoring In addition, an over-arching curriculum must be developed for each residency training year that describes all the surgical procedures for which the resident must obtain proficiency No longer will it be acceptable to have exposure only to those diseases and surgical procedures that happen to occur when the resident is on a clinical rotation; it will be necessary to agree upon a fundamental curriculum of all the important procedures a resident must learn (and become proficient) and provide simulations of all these possibilities (a digital library of procedures) so every resident will perform to criterion each important surgical procedure before graduating—a very large challenge that will last decades to achieve This same methodology will become the standard for experienced surgeons who wish to adopt a new surgical procedure in their practice No longer will it be acceptable to take a weekend course and return to operate on patients; rather, a longer period of training to proficiency followed by a period of mentoring and/or proctoring will be required Simulation is also being used for preoperative planning and then surgical rehearsal of complicated surgical procedures Some of these difficult cases can be included in the digital library to train future surgeons as well A unique opportunity arises with surgical robotics: The same surgical console that is used to perform an operation can be used to preoperative planning, surgical rehearsal of a specific patient, or for education and training The robotic system can keep track of hand motions and continuously assess performance, whether for the assessment of skills or documentation of proficiency, both during residency training and throughout clinical practice career Thus the surgical robot has a role well beyond enhancement of surgical performance; it can incorporate training and assessment as an integral part of daily practice and life-long learning Until surgical robotic systems become ubiquitous, separate systems for training, assessment, planning, and rehearsal will need to be used The practicing clinician should foster the use of robotics with inclusion of simulation capabilities As technology both advances in sophistication and also incorporates the above simulation capabilities, surgeons should adapt by seizing the opportunity to train on simulators as well as preplan and rehearse their more difficult elective surgical cases 17.8 Artificial Organs and Transplantation Tissue engineering is making substantial progress [9] in growing synthetic organs, and transplantation is becoming successful in using less toxic immunosuppression, xenotransplantation, or other techniques The result will be sufficient tissues and organs for transplantation, whether by modifying current techniques or through the use of various forms of tissue and genetic engineering Once the need for artificial organs to substitute for organ failure has been satisfied, consideration can be made to the use of artificial organs for virtually any or every procedure Today, surgeons practice organ conservation; however, with an adequate supply of artificial organs, surgeons may train to proficiency in one operation per organ system: remove and replace the entire organ in most every circumstance There will be no need for dozens of different procedures in Richard M Satava the surgeon’s armamentarium, rather, one procedure per organ It may be conceivable that some day, rather than repair organs, surgeons will simply remove and replace any diseased organ, just as automobile parts are no longer repaired, but simply replaced by a new and better part 17.9 Surgical Systems and Robotics As indicated above, robotics provides a unique opportunity to integrate all the functions of a surgical procedure (surgeon, assistant, nurse, etc.) into a single system The next generation of robotics will also include entirely new capabilities: smart instruments, automatic functions, energy-directed therapy and MEMS, nano-, and biosurgery Smart instruments are those that include sensors or diagnostic capabilities within the surgical instrument Instruments, such as graspers, will have sensors that provide the sense of touch, at normal sensory levels as well as scaled to even microforce levels—beyond the level a normal human hand can feel Other instruments, such as scalpels, will include various diagnostic sensors (Raman spectroscopy, hyperspectral analysis) that will be able to distinguish between healthy and malignant tissue [10] In addition, instruments are becoming multifunctional and capable of performing entire tasks The most typical example is the end-to-end anastomosis (EEA) stapler Rather than dividing the intestines and hand sewing the two ends together, current practice is to divide the bowel, attach the stapler, and with one squeeze of the hand, perform a complete anastomoses, usually with a higher level of precision than hand sewing There are other new tools becoming available, such as a number of methods for automatically creating a vascular anastomosis [11] Analysis of a surgical procedure can be done by breaking down the entire procedure into a series of sequential smaller tasks; it is reasonable to expect that it would be possible to automate each of the individual steps, eventually integrating all the steps into a single autonomous procedure Once the integration of a sequence of steps is achieved, it would only be logical to simulate or rehearse the entire procedure (on patient specific three-dimensional CT scan); this procedure can also be edited (delete all the errors, like editing a document on a word processor), and then export the perfected procedure, step by step, to the robotic system to perform the entire procedure automatically—under the close supervision of the surgeon, who could intervene at any time This is the methodology used every day in the engineering community: automating a process and supervisory control Since robotic systems currently available can perform tasks at 12 to 15 times the speed, with 10 to 20 times the Chapter 17  Adapting to Future Technologies precision of humans, it could be speculated that once the surgeon has rehearsed and edited the procedure on the virtual person, the robotic system could perform the procedure in minutes instead of hours, with greater precision More speculative is the coupling of the human thought process to controlling robotic systems The brain–machine interface systems that are in today’s laboratories permits monkeys to control a robotic arm simply by thinking, albeit it at a very rudimentary level [12, 13] As this technology rapidly progresses, there has been speculation that it will be possible to simply think through a complex task such as surgery and have the robotic systems perform to precision While clearly beyond any technology that will be implemented by the current generation of surgeons, some lesser variation of direct intellectual control of robotic systems may emerge This speculation is supported through analogy to the implementation of clinical trials in quadriplegic patients using an implanted brain chip to control robotic manipulator motion To the practicing surgeon, this means that surgery may place more and more emphasis on intellectual and cognitive skills and less on manual skills Crafting a surgical procedure may become more important than performing the procedure As advanced technology provides more precise automatic instruments (and robotics) and better surgical planning tools, surgeons must learn to master these new systems (rather than ignore them) and learn how to best integrate them into a busy clinical practice 17.10 Unconventional Surgery Most of the discussion has focused upon variations on established surgical practices using instruments that are a modification of current surgical tools There are a number of new technologies that are fundamentally different One class of technologies is the energy-directed systems, which include some ablation technologies in use today, such as radiofrequency (RF), thermal (cryo or heat), laser, as well as those used by radiologists such as X-ray, proton beam, etc A significant difference between radiological and surgical use of energy systems (X-ray, proton beam, etc.) is that radiologists usually discharge X-rays over large areas to kill massive amounts of tissue, whereas the surgical energy tools are used with precision (and usually hand held) for very specific localized effect There are other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that are being investigated as potential energy-directed surgical tools: microwave, millimeter wave, femtosecond lasers, HIFU [14], photodynamic, and photoinduction therapy What all these have in common is that they replace the conventional mechanical instruments of scalpel, clamp, 159 160 VI  Beyond the Future and stapler with precisely directed energy Although some of these new technologies are handheld instruments, the majority of these energy-directed tools are (and will be) controlled with robotic systems to provide accuracy and safety A second class of unconventional surgical instrument is the micro- and nanoscale systems (microsystems are a thousand times smaller and nanosystems are a million times smaller than are current instruments) Like energy-directed systems and because of their small size, micro- and nanoscaled systems must be computer controlled Some simple microsystems are being used for ophthalmology, otolaryngology, plastic, and neurological surgery, the most commonly employed is LASIK surgery The experimentation now is on creating entire machines on a microscopic level: for microscale there are the microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), which are etched from silicon wafers, and for nanoscale there are assemblies of molecules into specific configurations to produce tiny machines that can enter the blood stream and cells At the time of this writing, demonstration nanoengines have been created but not designed specifically for any medical application—in essence, proof of concept How far these systems will proceed to the vision of miniature machines traveling through the body and blood stream as depicted in Isaac Asimov’s The Fantastic Voyage [15] is yet to be seen The impact of these unconventional new technologies is not predictable, because their use signals a complete disruption in the practice of surgery This change is best characterized as follows Current surgical technologies are used to resect, remove, replace, and repair organs and tissues—structure and anatomy; the unconventional technologies will be implemented at the cellular and molecular levels—changing the basic biology (and possibly DNA itself) without changing the anatomy but inducing the repair at a biologic level Hence the term biosurgery has been applied to indicate this fundamental change [16] The challenges to practicing surgeons are even greater, since it will be necessary to keep abreast of advances not only in the practice of surgery, but also for the basic sciences of biology, engineering, and informatics, a monumental task 17.11 Conclusion The principle tenant of disruptive technologies is that a revolutionary change challenges core knowledge and practice, and requires the surgeon to reevaluate his or her practice in order to adapt to the change, frequently on less-than-complete information or proof This past century, and especially the past 20 years, has produced repeated assault on many aspects of surgery: mini- mally invasive approach, robotics, surgical simulation, transplantation, and many more No longer is change being slowly and methodically introduced one change at a time; rather, the surgeon is being buffeted from many sides at once Interdisciplinary knowledge is required to keep up with these changes, a quite impossible task in lieu of the many other stresses to clinical practice The traditional approach to life-long learning through occasional continuing medical education (CME) courses must be supplemented by self education through journals, Web-based education, and other information-based systems Keeping abreast of the latest surgical technologies, techniques, and procedures will require more than a weekend course; it must include subsequent mentoring and proctoring until proficiency is obtained before incorporating the new technology into a surgeon’s clinical practice And outcomes must be documented to prove that the acquisition of new skills and procedures has been done safely Finally, it is imperative for surgeons to carefully address the moral and ethical implications of the new technologies, to ensure that not only can it be introduced safely, but that the technology will not have unintended longterm consequences The burden upon surgeons has never been so great References Senn N (1908) The dawn of military surgery Surgery, gynecology and obstetrics, pp 477–482 Giuliano KA, Haskins JR, Taylor DL (2003) Advances in high content screening for drug discovery Assay Drug Dev Technol 1:565–577 Marescaux J, Clement JM, Tassetti V, Koehl C, Sotin S, Russier Y, Mutter D, Delingette H Ayache N (1998) Virtual reality applied to hepatic surgery simulation: the next revolution Ann Surg 228:627–634 Altobelli DE, Kikinis R, Mulliken JB, Cline H, Lorensen W, Jolesz F (1993) Computer-assisted three dimensional planning in craniofacial surgery Plastic Reconstruct Surg 92:576–585 Sandberg WS, Ganous TJ, Steiner C (2003) Setting a research agenda for perioperative systems design Semin Laparosc Surg 10:57–70 Martin JA, Regehr G, Reznick R, MacRae H, Murnaghan J, Hutichinson C, Brown M (1997) Objective structured assessment of technical skill (OSATS) for surgical residents Br J Surg 84:273–278 Derossis AM, Fried GM, Abrahamowicz M, Sigman HH, Barkun JS, Meakins JL (1998) Development of a model of evaluation and training of laparoscopic skills Am J Surg 175:482–487 Seymour NE, Gallagher AG, Roman SA, O’Brien MK, Bansal VK, Andersen D, Satava RM (2002) Virtual reality training improves operating room performance: results of a randomized, double-blinded study Ann Surg 236:458–464 Richard M Satava Lalan S, Pomerantsva I, Vacanti JP (2001) Tissue engineering and its potential impact on surgery World J Surg 25:1458–1466 10 Verimetra, Inc http://www.verimetra.com 11 Wolff R, Alderman EI, Caskey MP et al (2003) Clinical and six-month angiographic evaluation of coronary arterial graft interrupted anastomoses by use of self-closing clip device: A multicentrial prospective clinical trial J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 126:168–177 12 Serruya MD, Hatsopoulos NG, Paninski L, Fellows MR, Donoghue JP (2002) Instant neural control of movement signal Nature 416:121–122 Chapter 17  Adapting to Future Technologies 13 Donoghue JP (2002) Connecting cortex to machines: recent advances in brain interfaces Nat Neurosci 5(Suppl):1085–1088 14 Vaezy S, Martin R, Keilman G, Kaczkowski P, Chi E, Yazaji E, Caps M, Poliachik C, Carter S, Sharar S, Comejo C, Crum L (1999) Control of splenic bleeding by using highintensity ultrasound J Trauma 47:521–525 15 Asimov I, Klement O, Kleiner H (1966) The fantastic voyage Houghton Mifflin, Boston 16 Satava RM, Wolff R (2003) Disruptive visions: biosurgery Surg Endosc 17:1833–1836 161 Subject Index A ACCME, see Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME)  23 achalasia  78 adaptive workflow engine  60 adrenalectomy – operating room set up  82 – robotic-assisted  80 Akamai platform  24 albumin synthesis  143 alerting system  68 allogeneic graft  140 anesthesia  anesthesiology  38 angiogenesis  146 antisepsis  antitelomerase  14 apligraf  136 artificial graft  140 artificial organ  14, 156, 158 artificial prosthesis  133 automated monitoring  59, 64, see also monitoring autopilot  58, 60 B ball trocar  102 bariatric surgery  75 Barrett’s esophagus  85 basal metabolic rate (BMI)  77 basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF)  140 bench model  37 biliary pancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS) – robotic-assisted  77 biodegradable polymer  135 BioIntelligence Age  12, 13 biomaterial  146 biosurgery  159, 160 bipolar cautery  128 bipolar vessel sealers (BVSs)  107 BMI, see basal metabolic arte bone formation  138 bone grafting  137 botulinum toxin injection  78 brain–machine interface system  159 bronchoscopy simulator  38, 45 bupivacaine  126 business process management (BPM)  70 C CAD, see computer-animated design cancer detection program  96 carbon dioxide  128 cardiac rhythm management  96 carotid angiography  30 carticel  136 cartilage  136 chest tube trainer  37 cholecystectomy  155 – robotic-assisted  75 – solo surgery  102 clinical assessment laboratory  40 CME, see continuing medical education colectomy  116, 118, 155 colorectal carcinoma  115, 116 colorectal metastasis  118 colorectal surgery  80 commercialization  12 common bile duct (CBD) injury  75 communication – human-to-human  57 complex adaptive system  60 computer-animated design (CAD)  51 computer-based simulation  27, 29 computer control room  42 computerized feedback loop  70 computerized tomography (CT)  164 Subject Index computer laboratory  42 computer technology  confocal fluorescence microscopy  94 confocal laser scanning microscopy  93 congenital cardiac defect  141 continuing medical education (CME)  19, 23 CT, see computerized tomography curriculum  158 curved window grasper  100 Cuschieri’s model of proficiency  50 cybermedicine  19 D data collection  63, 66 – automated  60 da Vinci system  77, 80, 124 dermagraft  136 diagnostic peritoneal lavage simulator  45 digital manometer  109 disruptive technology  9, 15 dissecting forceps  107, 108 – hemostatic  111 diverticulum  79 documentation  41 donor nephrectomy  81 – robotic-assisted  125 Dor fundoplication  78, 79 drug therapy  133 dysphagia  79 dysplasia  79 E e-learning  24 e-training  24 E² self-propelling endoscope  95 EAES  49 educational curriculum  158 electrocautery  111, 125 electromagnetic tracking system  30 electronic health record (EHR) system  58 electrophotography by xerography  end-stage renal disease (ESRD)  81 end-to-end anastomosis (EEA) stapler  159 EndoCinch  85 endofreeze system  102, 103 endonasal surgery  38 endoscopic instruments  99 endoscopic mucosal resection  85 endoscopic surgery  99 – blood loss  106 – robotic systems  101 endoscopy – gastrointestinal  38 – virtual simulator  38 Epicel  135 epidermal autograft  135 epinephrine  126 epiphrenic diverticulum resection  79 epithelium organoid unit  139 ERBE  103 esophagectomy  79 esophagus – fundoplication  101 – leiomyoma  79 – mucosa  78 – surgery  76, 78 European Liver Transplant Registry  126 evidence-based medicine  59 evidence-based surgery  156 evidence-based validation  47 expert’s opinions  22 extracardiac Fontan operation (ECFO)  141 extrahepatic disease  117 F flexible trocar  99, 100 flight simulation  37 floating ball  127 fluorescence laser scanning microscopy  93, 94 forceps  107 FTRD, see full-thickness resection device full-thickness resection device (FTRD)  105 G gallbladder carcinoma  118 gastric – surgery  80 gastric banding – robotic-assisted  77 gastric bypass  76 gastric cancer  80 gastroepiploic arteries  109 gastroesophageal reflux  85 gastrointestinal endoscopy  38 gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST)  115 gastrojejunostomy  77 – robotic-assisted  76 genetic engineering  13 GIST, see gastrointestinal stromal tumor glycosaminoglycan  137 Subject Index H J hand-sewn anastomosis  76, 77 harmonic scalpel  128 health care – costs  – quality improvement  58 – workflow  60 Heller myotomy  78 hemicolectomy  80 hemostasis  125, 127 hemostatic dissecting forceps  111 hepatectomy  118, 123, 128 hepatic vein  114 hepatocarcinoma  113 hepatocellular carcinoma  127 hepatocyte – transplantation  143 high-fidelity simulator  31 high-risk training situation  31 human – clone  13 – longevity  14 Human Genome Project  144 hyperbilirubinemia  143 hypothalamus  15 jet-cutter  127, see also water-jet dissector joint movement  124 I iatrogenic pathology  47 ileocoloanastomosis  118 immunosuppression  123, 133, 134, 158 implantable blood pressure measurement  95 inferior mesenteric artery (IMA)  109 Information Age  11 information system – anesthesiology  58 – surgical  58 information technology  4, 19, 57, 157 inguinal hernia  102 instrument for laparoscopic surgery – curved instruments  99 instruments – combination for endoscopic surgery  103 – endoscopic procedure  103 – straight instrument  100 – TEM  105 insulin  133 intelligent computer  13 interface engine  67 Internet  19 interoperability  70 intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma  118 irinotecan  117 K kidney transplant  123 L laparoscopic cholecystectomy  29, 103 laser photocoagulation  117 LASIK surgery  160 learning curve  35, 50 learning environment  36 – a state-of-the-art  39 learning process  48 leiomyoma – esophageal  79 liquid-plus-gas  127 liver – metastasis  115 – metastatic tumor  115 – parenchyma  118, 127 – regeneration  143 – resectable colorectal metastasis  117 – resection  119 – support  143 – surgery  127 – transplantation  123, 126 – vasculature  145 liver surgery  127 living-donor liver transplantation  123, 126 living-donor nephrectomy – robotic technology  123 living–liver donor hepatectomy  128 living kidney donation  81 lobectomy  118 lower esophageal sphincter (LES)  78 M magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)  manometry experiment  110 medical encounter record (MER)  63 – information  67 medical error  47, 59 medical website – quality  20 MEMS, see microelectromechanical system mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)  138 165 166 Subject Index metrics  49 microelectromechanical system (MEMS)  89, 160 microrobot  51 microscanner  94 microsurgery  124 microsystem  160 microsystems technology (MST)  89 – endoscopy  95 – extracorporeal MST-enhanced device  92 – implantable MST device  93 – intracorporeal MST-enhanced device  92 – spectrometer  92 microtechnology  89 minimally invasive surgery (MIS)  47, 51 MIS, see minimally invasive surgery MIST-VR  27, 38 – software  28 model of Rasmussen  48 molybdenum  108 monitoring  41, 42, 63 monopolar electrical cautery  128 monopolar electrocautery  111 MRI, see magnetic resonance imaging MSC, see mesenchymal stem cell MST, see microsystems technology – spectrometer  92 multiaccess surgery  156 multimedia  20, 48 – education  21 – learning  21 multimodality curriculum  35 myotomy  79 N nanoscale system  160 nanotechnology  89 National Capital Area Medical Simulation Center (NCAMSC)  39 Natural polymers  135 needle holder  99, 100 nephrectomy – operating room  82 NET, see neuroendocrine tumors netMED global survey  91 neuroendocrine tumors (NET)  115 Nissen fundoplication  78, 85 O Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE)  36 OLT, see orthotopic liver transplant on-the-job training  36 operating room (OR)  35, 43 – automated  65 – control room  43 – interdisciplinary team  156 optical bilirubin analyzer  92 OR, see operating room organ transplantation  123, 158 orthotopic liver transplant (OLT)  115 otolaryngology  38 oxaliplatin  117 P pain management  65 pancreatic – surgery  80 pancreaticoduodenectomy  80 parenchymal transection  126 part-task trainer  37 pattern recognition  PDA, see personal data assistant peer review process  20, 24 PEI, see percutaneous ethanol injection percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI)  115 perioperative environment  57 perioperative systems design  63 Perioperative Systems Process Acceleration Tool (PSPAT)  63, 66 – software architecture  68 personal data assistant (PDA)  22 personal digital assistants (PDAs)  157 picture archiving system (PACS)  67 piston pump  127 Plicator device  85 pneumoperitoneum  124, 125, 128 poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) sheet  136 poly-4-hydroxybutyric acid (P4HB)  141 polycaprolactone-polylactide copolymer (PCLA)  141 polyglycolic acid (PGA)  136 polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA)  141 polylactic acid (PLA)  136 polymer  135 – template  136 polymer microsensor  93 polyurethane sheet  135 postsurgical care  66 posttraining skills  32 proficiency-based training  157 prostheses  14 PSPAT, see Perioperative Systems Acceleration Tool – software architecture  68 psychometric test  29 PubMed  19 Pyrex wafer  144 Subject Index Q quality measures  30 R radiofrequencies (RFA) – hepatic tumor  113 radiofrequency (RF)  159 – electrosurgical apparatus  117 radio frequency identification (RFID)  12, 60 radius surgical system  101 Rasmussen model  48, 49 RECIPE  61, 70 renal thrombosis  126 reporting system  68 return on investment (ROI)  61 RFA, see radiofrequency (RF) robot  13, 14, 51 robotic electrocautery  80 robotic interface  50 robotic system  60 robotic technology  75 robot technology  Roux-en-Y gastric  76 S scaffold – development  146 scaffold fabrication techniques  139 service-oriented architectures (SOAs)  63, 67 short bowel syndrome  139 silicon  144 simulation – anesthesia  38 – computer-based  27 – cost  39 – curriculum  50 – development  28 – education  30 – high fidelity  31 – identification of errors  30 – medical education  44 – objective assessment  29 – quality  29 – technology  48, 155 – training  30 – training curriculum  31 – training program  28 simulator  skin graft  135 Small intestinal transplantation  139 stapler  127 stem cell biology  138 stem cell research  146 stress control  51 Stretta procedure  85 supervision  37 supervisory control  159 surgery – bariatric  75 – colorectal  80 – communication  – endoluminal  85, 103 – endoscopic  99 – esophageal  76, 78 – gastric  80 – history of technology  – laparoscopic  – laparoscopic skills  37 – minimally  – minimally invasive  3, – mucosa  78 – pancreatic  80 – robotics  – robotic system  158 – transvisceral  86 surgical education  157 surgical simulation  158 suspended animation  15 suture grasper  99, 100 synthetic polymer  135 syringe  109 Systems Acceleration Tool  63 T TACE, see transarterial chemoembolization taxonomy  49 technical skills training  30, 31 technology – ages of the development  12 telecommuting  39 telemedicine  69 telementoring  telemetric pacemaker  90 telerobotic surgery  126 telomerase  14 TEM-Erbe combination instrument  104 tissue engineering  133 – blood vessel substitutes  141 – cartilage  137 – cells  134 – cell transplantation  144 – clinical applications  146 – components  134 167 168 Subject Index – gastrointestinal tract  140 – intestine  139 – liver  143 – phalanx  138 – skin  135 – small joint  138 – stomach  140 – trachea  137 – treatment of bone defects  137 – vascular graft  141 total cavopulmonary connection (TCPC)  142 total educational  158 training – curriculum  31 – proficiency-based  32 transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM)  104 transarterial chemoembolization (TACE)  115 transhiatal esophagectomy – robotic-assisted  79 transplantation  158 transplantation surgery  133 transvisceral surgery  86 Turing test  37, 49 U ultrasonically activated devices (USADs)  107 ultrasonic dissector  127 ultrasonic vibration  107, 110, 111 umbilicus  125 unexpected events  60 ureter  125 ureteroscopy  38 V vascular anastomosis simulator  45 vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)  140 vascularized autograft  137 video footage  21 videoscopic technology  85 video teleconference  39 virtual cell  156 virtual endoscopy simulator  38 virtual reality (VR)  27, 47 – laboratory  43 – training  36 – Turing test  37 virtual ureterscopy  38 VR, see virtual reality VR-simulated environment  37 W water-jet dissector  127, 128 Web information bus  67 Web services – technology  69 WebSurg World Virtual University  19 Wolf combination instruments  103 workflow engine  63, 65, 66, 70, see also adaptive workflow engine X X-rays  159 xenotransplantation  158 ... Waseda Chapter 12 Innovative Instruments in Endoscopic Surgery Figure 12. 13 demonstrates the function of rinsing and suction using the laparoscopic combination instrument 12. 3 Fig 12. 12 Solo surgery... Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 24 2:717– 723 Chapter 11  Microtechnology in Surgical Devices 21 Schurr MO (20 04) Sensors in minimally invasive therapy – a technology coming of age Invas Ther Allied... achieving hemostasis when bleeding occurs An increasingly important part of endoscopic surgery is endoluminal surgery In addition to the points abovementioned in endoluminal surgery, for example in

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